Literary topos
In the context of classical Greek rhetoric a topos (literally "a place"; plural: topoi) referred to a standardised method of constructing or treating an argument.
Ernst Robert Curtius expanded this concept in studying
topoi as
commonplaces: reworkings of traditional material, particularly the descriptions of standardised settings, but extended to almost any literary
meme. Critics have traced the use and re-use of such topoi from the literature of
classical antiquity to the
18th century.